Posted on 07/25/2002 4:57:52 AM PDT by BigWaveBetty
Original List (age22)
1. Handsome
2. Charming
3. Financially successful
4. A caring listener
5. Witty
6. In good shape
7. Dresses with style
8. Appreciates finer things
9. Full of thoughtful surprises
10. An imaginative, romantic lover
Revised List (age 32)
1. Nice looking
(prefer hair on his head)
2. Opens car doors, holds chairs
3. Has enough money for a nice dinner
4. Listens more than talks
5. Laughs at my jokes
6. Carries bags of groceries with ease
7. Owns at least one tie
8. Appreciates a good home-cooked meal
9. Remembers birthdays and anniversary
10. Seeks romance at least once a week
Revised List (age 42)
1. Not too ugly (bald head OK)
2. Doesn't drive off until I'm in the car
3. Works steady - splurges on dinner out occasionally
4. Nods head when I'm talking
5. Usually remembers punch lines of jokes
6. Is in good enough shape to rearrange the furniture
7. Wears a shirt that covers his stomach
8. Knows not to buy champagne with screw-top lids
9. Remembers to put the toilet seat down
10. Shaves most weekends
Revised List (age 52)
1. Keeps hair in nose and ears trimmed
2. Doesn't belch or scratch in public
3. Doesn't borrow money too often
4. Doesn't nod off to sleep when I'm venting
5. Doesn't re-tell the same joke too many times
6. Is in good enough shape to get off couch on weekends
7. Usually wears matching socks and fresh underwear
8. Appreciates a good TV dinner
9. Remembers your name on occasion
10. Shaves some weekends
Revised List (age 62)
1. Doesn't scare small children
2. Remembers where bathroom is
3. Doesn't require much money for upkeep
4. Only snores lightly when asleep
5. Remembers why he's laughing
6. Is in good enough shape to stand up by himself
7. Usually wears some clothes
8. Likes soft foods
9. Remembers where he left his teeth
10. Remembers that it's the weekend
Revised List (age 72)
1. Breathing
2. Doesn't miss the toilet
Doesn't drive off until I'm in the car
That is sooo funny. With 4 children, you don't know how true that is.
Doesn't nod off to sleep when I'm venting.
Oh, so annoying!
KATE Winslet is helping "Road to Perdition" director Sam Mendes with his grooming. The "Titanic" star, who recently split from hubby Jim Threapleton and started sleeping with Mendes, directs the director to lie face down. Then she breaks out her leg-waxing kit and pulls all the hair off his back. "Sam is a nice-looking chap," she confides to the London Telegraph. "But he's on the hirsute side."
Eeewwwwwwww!
Can't stand a man who wears a lot of makeup!
You crack me up Betty.
And then there's this guy...
JL, I think he's been to the High Heels for Men site!
Tonya is so jealous of his legs!
We love men with dimples, cleft chin, and chocolate brown eyes!
One of my favorite things to do!
That Kate Winslet story reminds me, I have to brush the dog. Be back later!
Sigh! Remember Tom Selleck....I put him on your birthday page last year I think! :)
Oh yeah, you made a great photo of Tom and us partying on my birthday. I had bookmarked that thread just for that pic, but alas it's gone. *sniff sniff* ;-)
NEW York Times executive editor Howell Raines was forced to sit and watch as Bill McGowan accepted a National Press Club award Monday night for "Coloring the News: How Crusading for Diversity Has Corrupted American Journalism" - a book the Times refused to review.
Raines was one of 200 journalists at the club's annual awards dinner in Washington, D.C., because his son Ben Raines, a reporter for the Mobile Alabama Register, won an award for environmental reporting.
As he arrived with his live-in girlfriend, Krystyna Stachowiak, the Times honcho was made aware of McGowan's presence by a handful of demonstrators from the National Assn. of Hispanic Journalists, who were handing out fliers attacking his book.
Juan Gonzalez, the Daily News columnist who heads the Hispanic group, said in a statement: "This insulting book is a poorly argued indictment of the need to ensure diversity in America's newsrooms." The Washington Post's Richard Prince ripped it as full of "half-truths, spin and inaccuracies and is not worthy of an award."
One handout accused McGowan of "calling for a return to the days when the only minorities in a newsroom were emptying the waste baskets."
The protests, led by the National Assn. of Black Journalists, forced the club's board of governors to consider rescinding McGowan's award. Scoffed one McGowan supporter: "What they really should be protesting is their public school education which didn't prepare them to read this book."
McGowan actually applauds efforts to increase the number of minority journalists, but deplores the effects he says it's had on many newsrooms: political conformity, ethnic hypersensitivity and racial favoritism.
During pre-dinner cocktails, Raines avoided McGowan, who has complained loudly and often about the way the Times has ignored his book. "It was very awkward," said one witness. "It was like a showdown at the OK Corral."
In accepting his award for media criticism, McGowan thanked the National Press Club. Looking at Raines, he said, "It would have been easy to turn an eye of polite indifference to this book as some in the profession have done."
As for the protesters, "they've totally ignored what the book said and engaged in the worst kind of racial McCarthyism and race-baiting," McGowan said. "It's too bad we operate in a journalistic culture where such ill-informed accusations have to be taken seriously."
That would be a garage sale to brake for!
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